Faculty of Health Sciences and Sport, University of Stirling, Stirling, Scotland.
Department of Psychology, University of Stirling, Stirling, Scotland.
BMC Womens Health. 2024 Apr 3;24(1):217. doi: 10.1186/s12905-024-03063-6.
Women's pelvic health is a globally important subject, included in international and United Kingdom health policies, emphasising the importance of improving information and access to pelvic health services. Consequences of pelvic symptoms are intimate, personal, and varied, often causing embarrassment and shame, affecting women's quality of life and wellbeing.
To understand the experience of seeking healthcare for stigmatised pelvic health symptoms by synthesising all types of published primary research and mapping the results to behavioural theory, to identify potential targets for intervention.
Systematic search of MEDLINE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, SocINDEX, PubMED databases, CDSR and CENTRAL registers, from inception to May 2023 for all types of research capturing women's views and experiences of seeking help with stigmatised urogenital and bowel symptoms. Studies only reporting prevalence, predictors of help-seeking, non-health related help-seeking, or written in languages other than English, German, French, Spanish and Swedish were excluded. Reference checking and forward citation searching for all included studies was performed. A results-based synthesis approach was used to integrate quantitative and qualitative data. Themes were mapped to the Common-Sense model and Candidacy framework. The Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool was used for critical appraisal. Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation - Confidence in Evidence from Reviews of Qualitative research for assessing certainty of review findings.
86 studies representing over 20,000 women from 24 high income countries were included. Confidence was high that barriers to help-seeking were similar across all study types and pelvic symptoms: stigma, lack of knowledge, women's perception that clinicians dismissed their symptoms, and associated normalising and deprioritising of low bother symptoms. Supportive clinicians and increased knowledge were key facilitators.
Using the Common-Sense Model to explore women's help-seeking behaviour with stigmatised pelvic symptoms reveals problems with cognitive representation of symptom identity, emotional representations of embarrassment and shame, and a subjective norm that women believe their symptoms will be trivialised by clinicians. Together these barriers frustrate women's identification of their candidacy for healthcare. Addressing these issues through behavioural change interventions for women and clinicians, will help to achieve universal access to pelvic healthcare services (United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 3.7).
PROSPERO CRD42021256956.
女性的盆腔健康是一个全球性的重要课题,被纳入国际和英国的卫生政策中,强调了改善盆腔健康服务信息和获取途径的重要性。盆腔症状的后果是私密的、个人的、多样的,常常导致尴尬和羞耻,影响女性的生活质量和幸福感。
通过综合所有类型已发表的原始研究,将行为理论与女性寻求治疗有污名的盆腔健康症状的经历联系起来,以确定干预的潜在目标。
从 2023 年 5 月开始,对 MEDLINE、CINAHL、PsycINFO、SocINDEX、PubMED 数据库、CDSR 和 CENTRAL 登记处进行了系统搜索,以获取所有类型的研究,这些研究都捕捉了女性对有污名的泌尿生殖和肠道症状寻求帮助的看法和经验。仅报告流行率、求助预测因素、非健康相关求助或用英语、德语、法语、西班牙语和瑞典语以外的语言书写的研究被排除在外。对所有纳入的研究进行了参考文献检查和前向引文搜索。采用基于结果的综合方法整合定量和定性数据。主题被映射到常识模型和候选框架。使用混合方法评估工具对定性研究进行批判性评价。评估审查结果确定性的推荐评估、制定和评估-从定性研究中对证据的信心的分级系统用于评估审查结果的置信度。
86 项研究代表了来自 24 个高收入国家的 20000 多名女性,这些研究来自于各种研究类型。有高度信心认为,寻求帮助的障碍在所有研究类型和盆腔症状中是相似的:污名、缺乏知识、女性认为临床医生轻视她们的症状,以及相关的正常化和对低困扰症状的优先级降低。支持性的临床医生和增加的知识是关键的促进因素。
使用常识模型来探讨女性对有污名的盆腔症状的寻求帮助行为,揭示了症状身份认知、尴尬和羞耻的情感表现以及女性认为她们的症状会被临床医生轻视的主观规范方面的问题。这些障碍共同阻碍了女性对自己获得医疗保健的资格的认同。通过对女性和临床医生进行行为改变干预,解决这些问题,将有助于实现普遍获得盆腔保健服务的目标(联合国可持续发展目标 3.7)。
PROSPERO CRD42021256956。